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Friday 14 February 2014

The Awesome HAWAEI HONOR 3X

The good: The Huawei Honor 3X comes packed with plenty of features, including dual-SIM capability, an octa-core processor and a 5.5-inch IPS display at a not-too-shabby price of $280.
The bad: It's still running on Android 4.2.2, where other newer handsets come loaded with Android 4.4 KitKat; you'll need to do some work to set up the phone if you're getting the handset straight from China, as it lacks all the Google features, such as the Play Store.
The bottom line: The Honor 3X offers great performance and specs for its low price. However, unless you're getting a local version with Google Mobile Services pre-installed, you will not be getting the full flavor of Android without some effort.
Available only in China for now (though Huawei does have plans to debut this handset in Southeast Asia), the Huawei Honor 3X is one of the first handsets available using MediaTek's "true" eight-core processor, the MediaTek MT6592, running at 1.7GHz. However, that's not all -- the handset packs a 5.5-inch IPS display, has a 13-megapixel rear camera, a 5-megapixel front camera and dual-SIM capability for the low price of just 1,698 Chinese Yuan ($280) without a contract.
If this sounds like an attractive package, well, it is. Huawei has managed to pack pretty good specs at a price point that would be considered budget tier. But how does it hold up in day-to-day use?
Eight-cores, anyone?

Design

The Honor 3X resembles pretty much most of the other Android handsets in the market today, with a flat rectangular design and curved corners. You'll find physical touch-sensitive buttons located below the 5.5-inch IPS display, which has a resolution of 1,280x720 pixels. Since it's an IPS screen, you'll find that viewing angles are pretty good even when looking at the handset from the sides, and the brightness of the display makes it viewable outdoors.
The Honor 3X sports physical buttons.
While it's made of glossy black plastic, the feel and build of the Honor 3X is solid and I like the heft of the handset in my hands. The one thing that I dislike about the handset, however, has to be the fingerprint smudges that comes with just a few minutes of use.
You will get plenty of ugly fingerprint smudges on the rear cover.
The power and volume buttons are located on the right, making them easy to reach when holding the smartphone in one hand. The speaker is located at the back nearer the bottom, while the 13-megapixel camera and flash are found right at the top.

Features

Huawei's handset is a 3G only device, and while there's no 4G, this means it should work almost anywhere in the world. It has two SIM slots, allowing you to have two mobile lines in one handset. Only one line can have 3G active, but you can select which SIM card to use for data, but I doubt anyone would use the non-3G activated SIM since it will be very slow. Other connectivity options include Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and GPS.
OS and apps
The Honor 3X runs Huawei's newest Emotion UI 2.0, and the Android skin has some nifty tricks up its sleeve. Instead of an app drawer, the Emotion UI places all your apps on the home screen, just like iOS. I guess this is a slightly better approach, since it requires one less action to get to your app, but you do end up with plenty of home screens (personally, I prefer an app drawer, and a maximum of two home screens at most to keep my smartphone's display neat and clean).
Like Xiaomi's MIUI, there's a theming feature, which lets you change the look of the UI. The phone comes with five official themes, and you can go online to download custom themes as well. Other options include the ability to manually select specific features to tweak, which provides the user with an impressive amount of control over the handset. While the theming feature works, I encountered a bug when applying a theme that emptied my home screens -- a reboot fixed this though.
Changing themes is very simple to do.
One cool feature that I particularly liked about Emotion UI 2.0 is the Simple mode. I've seen similar modes before in Japanese phones designed for the elderly, but the Honor 3X lets you switch between your standard and simple modes easily.
Simple mode resembles Windows Phone 8.
Another cool feature I want to highlight is the power-tracking app that monitors how much power consumption the various apps on the phone use. If it monitors an app using quite a lot of energy, it will actually prompt you to close the app to help you save power. Pretty nifty, eh.
Now here's the downside. The Honor 3X that I reviewed doesn't come with Google services, so if you're thinking of grabbing this handset from China (and don't want to wait for a localized version), you'll need to do a lot of work to install apps such as Gmail, Play Store, Maps, Hangout, Google+, Chrome, etc. There's no option to add a Google account and the built-in app store doesn't have any of these apps available. I got around this by downloading the Baidu store app and installing these apps from there. Even then, you won't be able to add another Google account easily (I have yet to figure that out).
I also hated the default keyboard -- it's mainly designed for writing in Mandarin, and the English keyboard has crappy button placement -- the fullstop is next to a tiny spacebar, and you'll find yourself hitting the wrong keys. The autocorrect prediction isn't very good either -- you're better off downloading the Google Keyboard or any other keyboard apps from the Play Store.
Camera
Fitted with a 13-megapixel rear camera and a front 5-megapixel sensor, the Honor 3X seems like the perfect shooter. The software modes include all the standard options, such as HDR, panorama, beauty and one called motion AV. It lets you create a faux cinemagraph effect, but it's not as cool as the one you can find on Nokia's Windows Phone devices.
The performance of the 13-megapixel rear camera is average at best. While it's capable of taking good macro shots, it doesn't seem able to take good landscape shots as you can see in the picture below. I suspect this is due to the phone's auto settings, which is unable to properly determine the right mode to use. In our indoor studio test, the Honor 3X seems capable enough, but low-light shots suffer slightly from over-processing, resulting in noisy images.
The rear camera doesn't seem to able to take a good landscape shot.

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